Getting Started with C#, Part 1

Find out how to write your first C# program in this book excerpt from Learning C#. This is the first of two excerpts on getting started with C#.

You can use C# to create three different types of programs:

Web applications

Windows applications

Console applications

The .NET platform is web-centric. The C# language was developed to allow .NET programmers to create very large,
powerful, high-quality web applications quickly and easily. The .NET technology for creating web applications is
called ASP.NET.

ASP.NET, the next generation from ASP (Active Server Pages), is composed of two Microsoft development technologies:
Web Forms and Web Services. While the development of fully realized web applications using these technologies is beyond
the scope of this book, learning the basics of the C# language will certainly get you started in the right direction.
C# is generally acknowledged to be the language of choice for ASP.NET development.

Typically, you'll create an ASP.NET application when you want your program to be available to end users on any
platform (e.g., Windows, Mac, Unix). By serving your application over the Web, end users can access your program
with any browser.

When you want the richness and power of a native application running directly on the Windows platform, alternatively
you might create a desktop-bound Windows application. The .NET tools for building Windows applications are called Windows
Forms; a detailed analysis of this technology is also beyond the scope of this book.

However, if you don't need a Graphical User Interface (GUI) and just want to write a simple application that talks
to a console window (i.e., what we used to call a DOS box), you might consider creating a console application. This book
makes extensive use of console applications to illustrate the basics of the C# language.

Web, Windows, and console applications are described and illustrated in the following pages.

Console applications are very helpful when learning a language because they strip away
the distraction of the Graphical User Interface. Rather than spending your time creating complex windowing applications,
you can focus on the details of the language constructs, such as how you create classes and methods, how you branch
based on runtime conditions, and how you loop. All these topics will be covered in detail in coming chapters.

Windows applications

A Windows application runs on a PC's desktop. You are already familiar with Windows applications such as Microsoft
Word or Excel. Windows applications are much more complex than console applications and can take advantage of the full
suite of menus, controls, and other widgets you've come to expect in a modern desktop application.
Figure 2-2 shows the output of a simple windows application.

Figure 2-2.A Windows application

ASP.NET applications

An ASP.NET application runs on a web server and delivers its functionality through a browser, typically over the Web.
ASP.NET technology facilitates developing web applications quickly and easily. Figure 2-3 shows
a message from a simple ASP.NET application.

Figure 2-3.An ASP.NET application

Although most commercial applications will be either Windows or ASP.NET programs, console applications have a
tremendous advantage in a C# primer. Windows and ASP.NET applications bring a lot more overhead; there is great
complexity in managing the window and all the events associated with the window. (Events are covered in Chapter 19.)
Console applications keep things simple--allowing you to focus on the features of the language.

TIP: This book does not go into all the myriad details of building robust Windows and ASP.NET applications.
For complete coverage of these topics, please see Programming ASP.NET
and Programming .NET Windows Applications, both by Jesse Liberty and Dan Hurwitz (O'Reilly).

What's in a Program?

A program consists of English-language instructions called source code. The syntax for these instructions is strictly
defined by the language. Source code consists of a series of statements. A statement is an instruction to the complier.
Each instruction must be formed correctly, and one task you'll face when learning C# will be to learn the correct syntax
of the language. For example, in C# every statement ends with a semi-colon.

Each instruction has a semantic meaning that expresses what you are trying to accomplish. Although you must follow the
syntax, the semantics of the language are far more important in developing effective object-oriented programs. This book
will provide insight into both the syntax and the semantics of good C# programs.

Save the source code you write in a text file. You can write this source code file using any simple text editor (such
as Notepad), or you can use the Visual Studio .NET Integrated Development Environment (IDE). Visual Studio .NET is
described in Chapter 4.

Once you write your program, you compile it using the C# compiler. The end result of compiling the program is an
application.

Your First Program: Hello World

In this chapter, you will create a very simple application that does nothing more than display the words
"Hello World" to your monitor. This console application is the traditional first program for learning any
new language; it demonstrates some of the basic elements of a C# program.

Once you write your "Hello World" program and compile it, this chapter will provide a line-by-line
analysis of the source code. This analysis gives something of a preview of the language; Chapter 5 describes the
fundamentals much more fully.

As explained earlier, you can create C# programs with any text editor. You can, for example, create each of the three
programs shown previously (in Figure 2-1, Figure 2-2,
and Figure 2-3) with Notepad. To demonstrate that this is possible, you'll write your very
first C# program using Notepad.

Begin by opening Notepad and typing in the program exactly as shown in Example 2-1.

That is the entire program. Save it to your disk as a file called helloworld.cs.

We'll examine this program in some detail in just a moment. First, however, it must be compiled.

The Compiler

Once you save your program to disk, you must compile the code to create your application. Compiling your source code
means running a compiler and passing in the source code file. You run the compiler by opening a command prompt (DOS box)
and entering the program name csc. Then you pass in your source code file by entering the filename on the command
line, as in the following:

csc HelloWorld.cs

The job of the compiler is to turn your source code into a working program. It turns out to be just slightly more
complicated than that because .NET uses an intermediate language called Microsoft Intermediate Language (MSIL, sometimes
abbreviated to IL). The compiler reads your source code and produces IL. The .NET Just In Time (JIT) compiler then reads
your IL code and produces an executable application in memory.

Microsoft provides a command window with the correct environment variables set. Open the command window by selecting
the following menu items in this order:

Then navigate to the directory in which you created your code file and enter the following command:

csc helloworld.cs

The Microsoft C# compiler compiles your code; when you display the directory you'll find the compiler has produced
an executable file called helloworld.exe. Type helloworld at the command prompt, and your program executes,
as shown in Figure 2-4.

Figure 2-4.Compiling and running Hello World

Presto! You are a C# programmer. That's it, close the book, you've done it. Okay, don't close the book--there are details
to examine, but take a moment to congratulate yourself. Have a cookie.

Granted, the program you created is one of the simplest C# programs imaginable, but it is a complete C# program, and
it can be used to examine many of the elements common to C# programs.

In the next installment, examine your first program.

Jesse Liberty
is a senior program manager for Microsoft Silverlight where he is responsible for the creation of tutorials, videos and other content to facilitate the learning and use of Silverlight. Jesse is well known in the industry in part because of his many bestselling books, including O'Reilly Media's Programming .NET 3.5, Programming C# 3.0, Learning ASP.NET with AJAX and the soon to be published Programming Silverlight.